Doug, 

 

What aren't you tracking while you are tracking the movement of each and
every driver on the other side of the line?    That's what you have faith
in.

 

Nick 

 

 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Douglas Roberts
Sent: Sunday, September 23, 2012 8:23 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] faith

 

Yeah, well: that philosophy will get you dead if you are a motorcycle rider.
Maybe not the first year, but the longer you maintain "faith" that the other
diver will stay in his lane, the more likely it becomes that you won't make
it home one night.

 

I've been riding for 48 years, still alive...

 

--Doug

On Sun, Sep 23, 2012 at 6:13 PM, ERIC P. CHARLES <[email protected]> wrote:

Since this thread is still going... Curt said: 

"Faith: that the other drivers will stay on their side of the road. I don't
have to track every one exactly."

----
Exactly! 

It is faith when you stop monitoring the other cars when driving, stop
looking at the ground you are about to step on when walking, etc. It is
faith when you get out of bed without checking to see that the ground is
still there. The actions themselves entail the faith; they do not result
from faith, they are the faith. An interesting additional issue is when we
do and do not explicitly talk about the things we have faith in. It might
also be an additional issue on what basis some people have faith in a
"super-natural" "higher-power". (Both scare-quotes seem necessary, because
pretty everyone has faith in higher powers, and most people have faith in
things they don't have natural explanations for, but we seem to be focusing
primarily on the times when those faiths overlap.)  

Eric

P.S. Curt, if you are into Power's Perceptual Control Theory, do you know
Richard Marken and Warren Manell's work? They wrote a great article for a
journal issue I am putting together. 

P.P.S. The notion of "blind" faith is really very modern. Certainly it was
not long ago that faith in the Judeo-Christian God was primarily supported
by experiential evidence. "Behold the wonders," "experience God in every
blade of grass," "check out this amazing cathedral," "our army won," etc.
The fact that we sometimes meaningfully talk about "blind faith" seems to
indicate that the normal meaning of the term "faith" is not inherently
blind. 




On Fri, Sep 21, 2012 12:21 AM, Curt McNamara <[email protected]> wrote:

I had been nicely ignoring this thread in the belief (faith?) that it would
go away without affecting me. Alas, the need for a distraction from grading
has drawn me back into its basin of (strange) attraction.

Faith: that the other drivers will stay on their side of the road. I don't
have to track every one exactly. 
Action based on belief: ref. William Powers: Behavior, the Control of
Perception.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perceptual_control_theory

Faith or belief: my mental models of the world will still be true tomorrow.
These models have been built over time by hypothesis, testing, and
adjustment (toddler and stairs example).

               Curt

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------------

Eric Charles
Assistant Professor of Psychology
Penn State University
Altoona, PA 16601




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FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
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-- 
Doug Roberts
[email protected]
[email protected]

http://parrot-farm.net/Second-Cousins


505-455-7333 - Office
505-670-8195 - Cell

 

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